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Description
With the aid of metabolic pathways engineering, microbes are finding increased use as biocatalysts to convert renewable biomass resources into fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals and other valuable compounds. These alternative, bio-based production routes offer distinct advantages over traditional synthesis methods, including lower energy requirements, rendering them as more "green" and

With the aid of metabolic pathways engineering, microbes are finding increased use as biocatalysts to convert renewable biomass resources into fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals and other valuable compounds. These alternative, bio-based production routes offer distinct advantages over traditional synthesis methods, including lower energy requirements, rendering them as more "green" and "eco-friendly". Escherichia coli has recently been engineered to produce the aromatic chemicals (S)-styrene oxide and phenol directly from renewable glucose. Several factors, however, limit the viability of this approach, including low titers caused by product inhibition and/or low metabolic flux through the engineered pathways. This thesis focuses on addressing these concerns using magnetic mesoporous carbon powders as adsorbents for continuous, in-situ product removal as a means to alleviate such limitations. Using process engineering as a means to troubleshoot metabolic pathways by continuously removing products, increased yields are achieved from both pathways. By performing case studies in product toxicity and reaction equilibrium it was concluded that each step of a metabolic pathway can be optimized by the strategic use of in-situ adsorption as a process engineering tool.
ContributorsVasudevan, Anirudh (Author) / Nielsen, David R (Thesis advisor) / Torres, César I (Committee member) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
The Multiple Antibiotic Resistance Regulator Family (MarR) are transcriptional regulators, many of which forms a dimer. Transcriptional regulation provides bacteria a stabilized responding system to ensure the bacteria is able to efficiently adapt to different environmental conditions. The main function of the MarR family is to create multiple antibiotic resistance

The Multiple Antibiotic Resistance Regulator Family (MarR) are transcriptional regulators, many of which forms a dimer. Transcriptional regulation provides bacteria a stabilized responding system to ensure the bacteria is able to efficiently adapt to different environmental conditions. The main function of the MarR family is to create multiple antibiotic resistance from a mutated protein; this process occurs when the MarR regulates an operon. We hypothesized that different transcriptional regulator genes have interactions with each other. It is known that Salmonella pagC transcription is activated by three regulators, i.e., SlyA, MprA, and PhoP. Bacterial Adenylate Cyclase-based Two-Hybrid (BACTH) system was used to research the protein-protein interactions in SlyA, MprA, and PhoP as heterodimers and homodimers in vivo. Two fragments, T25 and T18, that lack endogenous adenylate cyclase activity, were used for construction of chimeric proteins and reconstruction of adenylate cyclase activity was tested. The significant adenylate cyclase activities has proved that SlyA is able to form homodimers. However, weak adenylate cyclase activities in this study has proved that MprA and PhoP are not likely to form homodimers, and no protein-protein interactions were detected in between SlyA, MprA and PhoP, which no heterodimers have formed in between three transcriptional regulators.
ContributorsTao, Zenan (Author) / Shi, Yixin (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Bean, Heather (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Lignocellulosic biomass represents a renewable domestic feedstock that can support large-scale biochemical production processes for fuels and specialty chemicals. However, cost-effective conversion of lignocellulosic sugars into valuable chemicals by microorganisms still remains a challenge. Biomass recalcitrance to saccharification, microbial substrate utilization, bioproduct titer toxicity, and toxic chemicals associated with chemical

Lignocellulosic biomass represents a renewable domestic feedstock that can support large-scale biochemical production processes for fuels and specialty chemicals. However, cost-effective conversion of lignocellulosic sugars into valuable chemicals by microorganisms still remains a challenge. Biomass recalcitrance to saccharification, microbial substrate utilization, bioproduct titer toxicity, and toxic chemicals associated with chemical pretreatments are at the center of the bottlenecks limiting further commercialization of lignocellulose conversion. Genetic and metabolic engineering has allowed researchers to manipulate microorganisms to overcome some of these challenges, but new innovative approaches are needed to make the process more commercially viable. Transport proteins represent an underexplored target in genetic engineering that can potentially help to control the input of lignocellulosic substrate and output of products/toxins in microbial biocatalysts. In this work, I characterize and explore the use of transport systems to increase substrate utilization, conserve energy, increase tolerance, and enhance biocatalyst performance.
ContributorsKurgan, Gavin (Author) / Wang, Xuan (Thesis advisor) / Nielsen, David (Committee member) / Misra, Rajeev (Committee member) / Nannenga, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Peatlands represent 3% of the earth’s surface but have been estimated to contain up to 30% of all terrestrial soil organic carbon and release an estimated 40% of global atmospheric CH4 emissions. Contributors to the production of CH4 are methanogenic Archaea through a coupled metabolic dependency of end products released

Peatlands represent 3% of the earth’s surface but have been estimated to contain up to 30% of all terrestrial soil organic carbon and release an estimated 40% of global atmospheric CH4 emissions. Contributors to the production of CH4 are methanogenic Archaea through a coupled metabolic dependency of end products released by heterotrophic bacteria within the soil in the absence of O2. To better understand how neighboring bacterial communities can influence methanogenesis, the isolation and physiological characterization of two novel isolates, one Methanoarchaeal isolate and one Acidobacterium isolate identified as QU12MR and R28S, respectively, were targeted in this present study. Co-culture growth in varying temperatures of the QU12MR isolate paired with an isolated Clostridium species labeled R32Q and the R28S isolate were also investigated for possible influences in CH4 production. Phylogenetic analysis of strain QU12MR was observed as a member of genus Methanobacterium sharing 98% identity similar to M. arcticum strain M2 and 99% identity similar to M. uliginosum strain P2St. Phylogenetic analysis of strain R28S was associated with genus Acidicapsa from the phylum Acidobacteria, sharing 97% identity to A. acidisoli strain SK-11 and 96% identity similarity to Occallatibacter savannae strain A2-1c. Bacterial co-culture growth and archaeal CH4 production was present in the five temperature ranges tested. However, bacterial growth and archaeal CH4 production was less than what was observed in pure culture analysis after 21 days of incubation.
ContributorsRamirez, Zeni Elizia (Author) / Cadillo-Quiroz, Hinsby (Thesis advisor) / Roberson, Robert (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is a readily transformable cyanobacteria used to study cyanobacterial genetics, as well as production of biofuels, polyesters, and other industrial chemicals. Free fatty acids are precursors to biofuels which are used by Synechocystis cells as a means of energy storage. By genetically modifying the cyanobacteria to

Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is a readily transformable cyanobacteria used to study cyanobacterial genetics, as well as production of biofuels, polyesters, and other industrial chemicals. Free fatty acids are precursors to biofuels which are used by Synechocystis cells as a means of energy storage. By genetically modifying the cyanobacteria to expel these chemicals, costs associated with retrieving the products will be reduced; concurrently, the bacteria will be able to produce the products at a higher concentration. This is achieved by adding genes encoding components of the Escherichia coli AcrAB-TolC efflux system, part of the resistance-nodulation-division (RND) transporter family, to Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. AcrAB-TolC is a relatively promiscuous multidrug efflux pump that is noted for expelling a wide range of substrates including dyes, organic solvents, antibiotics, and free fatty acids. Adding components of the AcrAB-TolC multidrug efflux pump to a previously created high free fatty acid producing strain, SD277, allowed cells to move more free fatty acids to the extracellular environment than did the parent strain. Some of these modifications also improved tolerance to antibiotics and a dye, rhodamine 6G. To confirm the function of this exogenous efflux pump, the genes encoding components of the AcrAB-TolC efflux pump were also added to Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and shown to grow on a greater concentration of various antibiotics and rhodamine 6G. Various endogenous efflux systems have been elucidated, but their usefulness in expelling products currently generated in Synechocystis is limited. Most of the elucidated pumps in the cyanobacteria are part of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily. The knowledge of the resistance-nodulation-division (RND) family transporters is limited. Two genes in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, slr2131 and sll0180 encoding homologs to the genes that encode acrB and acrA, respectively, were removed and the modifications resulted in changes in resistance to various antibiotics and a dye and also had an impact on free fatty acid secretion. Both of these deletions were complemented independently with the homologous E. coli gene and the resulting cyanobacteria strains had some of the inherent resistance restored to chloramphenicol and free fatty acid secretion was modified when compared to the wild-type and a high free fatty acid producing strain.
ContributorsBellefleur, Matthew Paul Allen (Author) / Curtiss, III, Roy (Thesis advisor) / Nielsen, David R (Committee member) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Rittmann, Bruce E. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
This dissertation focuses on the biosynthetic production of aromatic fine chemicals in engineered Escherichia coli from renewable resources. The discussed metabolic pathways take advantage of key metabolites in the shikimic acid pathway, which is responsible for the production of the aromatic amino acids phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan. For the first

This dissertation focuses on the biosynthetic production of aromatic fine chemicals in engineered Escherichia coli from renewable resources. The discussed metabolic pathways take advantage of key metabolites in the shikimic acid pathway, which is responsible for the production of the aromatic amino acids phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan. For the first time, the renewable production of benzaldehyde and benzyl alcohol has been achieved in recombinant E. coli with a maximum titer of 114 mg/L of benzyl alcohol. Further strain development to knockout endogenous alcohol dehydrogenase has reduced the in vivo degradation of benzaldehyde by 9-fold, representing an improved host for the future production of benzaldehyde as a sole product. In addition, a novel alternative pathway for the production of protocatechuate (PCA) and catechol from the endogenous metabolite chorismate is demonstrated. Titers for PCA and catechol were achieved at 454 mg/L and 630 mg/L, respectively. To explore potential routes for improved aromatic product yields, an in silico model using elementary mode analysis was developed. From the model, stoichiometric optimums maximizing both product-to-substrate and biomass-to-substrate yields were discovered in a co-fed model using glycerol and D-xylose as the carbon substrates for the biosynthetic production of catechol. Overall, the work presented in this dissertation highlights contributions to the field of metabolic engineering through novel pathway design for the biosynthesis of industrially relevant aromatic fine chemicals and the use of in silico modelling to identify novel approaches to increasing aromatic product yields.
ContributorsPugh, Shawn (Author) / Nielsen, David (Thesis advisor) / Dai, Lenore (Committee member) / Torres, Cesar (Committee member) / Lind, Mary Laura (Committee member) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering has aided the production of chemicals using renewable resources, thus offering a solution to our dependence on the dwindling petroleum resources. While a major portion of petroleum resources go towards production of fuels, a significant fraction also goes towards production of specialty chemicals. There has

Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering has aided the production of chemicals using renewable resources, thus offering a solution to our dependence on the dwindling petroleum resources. While a major portion of petroleum resources go towards production of fuels, a significant fraction also goes towards production of specialty chemicals. There has been a growing interest in recent years in commercializing bio-based production of such high value compounds. In this thesis the biosynthesis of aromatic esters has been explored, which have typical application as flavor and fragrance additive to food, drinks and cosmetics. Recent progress in pathway engineering has led to the construction of several aromatic alcohol producing pathways, the likes of which can be utilized to engineer aromatic ester biosynthesis by addition of a suitable enzyme from the acyltransferase class. Enzyme selection and screening done in this work has identified chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase enzyme(CAT) as a potential candidate to complete the biosynthetic pathways for each of 2-phenethyl acetate, benzyl acetate, phenyl acetate and acetyl salicylate. In the end, E. coli strains capable of producing up to 60 mg/L 2-phenethyl acetate directly from glucose were successfully constructed by co-expressing CAT in a previously engineered 2-phenylethanol producing host.
ContributorsMadathil Soman Pillai, Karthika (Author) / Nielsen, David (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Torres, Cesar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Emergence of multidrug resistant (MDR) bacteria is a major concern to global health. One of the major MDR mechanisms bacteria employ is efflux pumps for the expulsion of drugs from the cell. In Escherichia coli, AcrAB-TolC proteins constitute the major chromosomally-encoded drug efflux system. AcrB, a trimeric membrane protein is

Emergence of multidrug resistant (MDR) bacteria is a major concern to global health. One of the major MDR mechanisms bacteria employ is efflux pumps for the expulsion of drugs from the cell. In Escherichia coli, AcrAB-TolC proteins constitute the major chromosomally-encoded drug efflux system. AcrB, a trimeric membrane protein is well-known for its substrate promiscuity. It has the ability to efflux a broad spectrum of substrates alongside compounds such as dyes, detergent, bile salts and metabolites. Newly identified AcrB residues were shown to be functionally relevant in the drug binding and translocation pathway using a positive genetic selection strategy. These residues—Y49, V127, D153, G288, F453, and L486—were identified as the sites of suppressors of an alteration, F610A, that confers a drug hypersensitivity phenotype. Using site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) along with the real-time efflux and the classical minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) assays, I was able to characterize the mechanism of suppression.

Three approaches were used for the characterization of these suppressors. The first approach focused on side chain specificity. The results showed that certain suppressor sites prefer a particular side chain property, such as size, to overcome the F610A defect. The second approach focused on the effects of efflux pump inhibitors. The results showed that though the suppressor residues were able to overcome the intrinsic defect of F610A, they were unable to overcome the extrinsic defect caused by the efflux pump inhibitors. This showed that the mechanism by which F610A imposes its effect on AcrB function is different than that of the efflux pump inhibitors. The final approach was to determine whether suppressors mapping in the periplasmic and trans-membrane domains act by the same or different mechanisms. The results showed both overlapping and distinct mechanisms of suppression.

To conclude, these approaches have provided a deeper understanding of the mechanisms by which novel suppressor residues of AcrB overcome the functional defect of the drug binding domain alteration, F610A.
ContributorsBlake, Mellecha (Author) / Misra, Rajeev (Thesis advisor) / Stout, Valerie (Committee member) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
The basic scheme for photosynthesis suggests the two photosystems existing in parity with one another. However, cyanobacteria typically maintain significantly more photosystem I (PSI) than photosystem II (PSII) complexes. I set out to evaluate this disparity through development and analysis of multiple mutants of the genetically tractable cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp.

The basic scheme for photosynthesis suggests the two photosystems existing in parity with one another. However, cyanobacteria typically maintain significantly more photosystem I (PSI) than photosystem II (PSII) complexes. I set out to evaluate this disparity through development and analysis of multiple mutants of the genetically tractable cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 that exhibit a range of expression levels of the main proteins present in PSI (Chapter 2). One hypothesis was that the higher abundance of PSI in this organism is used to enable more cyclic electron flow (CEF) around PSI to contribute to greater ATP synthesis. Results of this study show that indeed CEF is enhanced by the high amount of PSI present in WT. On the other hand, mutants with less PSI and less cyclic electron flow appeared able to maintain healthy levels of ATP synthesis through other compensatory mechanisms. Reduction in PSI abundance is naturally associated with reduced chlorophyll content, and mutants with less PSI showed greater primary productivity as light intensity increased due to increased light penetration in the cultures. Another question addressed in this research project involved the effect of deletion of flavoprotein 3 (an electron sink for PSI-generated electrons) from mutant strains that produce and secrete a fatty acid (Chapter 3). Removing Flv3 increased fatty acid production, most likely due to increased abundance of reducing equivalents that are key to fatty acid biosynthesis. Additional components of my dissertation research included examination of alkane biosynthesis in Synechocystis (Chapter 4), and effects of attempting to overexpress fibrillin genes for enhancement of stored compounds (Chapter 5). Synechocystis is an excellent platform for metabolic engineering studies with its photosynthetic capability and ease of genetic alteration, and the presented research sheds light on multiple aspects of its fundamental biology.
ContributorsMoore, Vickie (Author) / Vermaas, Willem (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Roberson, Robert (Committee member) / Gaxiola, Roberto (Committee member) / Bingham, Scott (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The aims of this project are to demonstrate the design and implementation of separations modalities for 1) in situ product recovery and 2) upstream pretreatment of toxic feedstocks. Many value-added bioproducts such as alcohols (ethanol and butanol) developed for the transportation sector are known to be integral to a sustainable

The aims of this project are to demonstrate the design and implementation of separations modalities for 1) in situ product recovery and 2) upstream pretreatment of toxic feedstocks. Many value-added bioproducts such as alcohols (ethanol and butanol) developed for the transportation sector are known to be integral to a sustainable future. Likewise, bioproduced aromatic building blocks for sustainable manufacturing such as phenol will be equally important. The production of these compounds is often limited by product toxicity at 2- 20 g/L, whereas it may desirable to produce 20-200 g/L for economically feasible scale up. While low-cost feedstocks are desirable for economical production, they contain highly cytotoxic value-added byproducts such as furfural. It is therefore desirable to design facile detoxification methods for lignocellulose-derived feedstocks to isolate and recover furfural preceding ethanol fermentation by Escherichia coli. Correspondingly it is desirable to design efficient facile in situ recovery modalities for bioalcohols and phenolic bioproducts. Accordingly, in-situ removal modalities were designed for simultaneous acetone, butanol, and ethanol recovery. Additionally, a furfural removal modality from lignocellulosic hydrolysates was designed for upstream pretreatment. Solid-liquid adsorption was found to serve well each of the recovery modalities characterized here. More hydrophobic compounds such as butanol and furfural are readily recovered from aqueous solutions via adsorption. The primary operational drawback to adsorption is adsorbent recovery and subsequent desorption of the product. Novel magnetically separable mesoporous carbon powders (MMCPs) were characterized and found to be rapidly separable from solutions at 91% recovery by mass. Thermal desorption of value added products was found efficient for recovery of butanol and furfural. Fufural was desorbed from the MMCPs up to 57% by mass with repeated adsorption/thermal desorption cycles. Butanol was recovered from MMCPs up to an average 93% by mass via thermal desorption. As another valuable renewable fermentation product, phenol was also collected via in-situ adsorption onto Dowex Optipore L-493 resin. Phenol recovery from the resins was efficiently accomplished with tert-butyl methyl ether up to 77% after 3 washes.
ContributorsStaggs, Kyle William (Author) / Nielsen, David R (Thesis advisor) / Lin, Jerry S (Committee member) / Torres, César I (Committee member) / Lind, Mary Laura (Committee member) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017